"Given the strong range of this card, it'd make a great companion for anyone who travels frequently and needs to pick up WiFi access points that may be weak or hard to find with other cards. That said, I do wish the wireless application for Pocket PC listed access points within range (site survey). It's hard to do wardriving without this, and this would otherwise be the perfect device for sniffing networks.[...]ConclusionThis is a great card for the money! Great range from the 14dBm antenna, which surpasses other cards I've tested. Setup and installation are straightforward. I only wish it offered site survey so that one could see a list of available networks."

Oh I see what you meant Some WiFi cards list available access points- this is a feature of the software that comes with the card. It's not a hardware feature. That access point info is interesting (at least if you're a geek), and useful if you're trying to figure out what access points are in range and possibly available. Since Pocket PC 2003/Windows Mobile 2003 came out, many card vendors have left out this sniffer section of their software and instead let the user rely on the access point detection and listing feature built into the OS. The OS version isn't all that informative though, so it's nice when cards ship with such a utility. Since many cards don't, 3rd party sniffers like PocketWiNC are popular (www.cirond.com).